POLICY BRIEF. How to Control the Internet Market in Antiquities? The Need for Regulation and Monitoring. By Neil Brodie. July 2017 No.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "POLICY BRIEF. How to Control the Internet Market in Antiquities? The Need for Regulation and Monitoring. By Neil Brodie. July 2017 No."

Transcription

1 POLICY BRIEF How to Control the Internet Market in Antiquities? The Need for Regulation and Monitoring By Neil Brodie 1

2 ABOUT THE AUTHOR Neil Brodie graduated from the University of Liverpool with a PhD in Archaeology in 1991 and has held positions at the British School at Athens, the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge, where he was Research Director of the Illicit Antiquities Research Centre; Stanford University s Archaeology Center; and the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research at the University of Glasgow. He is presently Senior Research Fellow on the Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa project at the University of Oxford s School of Archaeology, and a member of the Trafficking Culture project. He has published widely on issues concerning the market in cultural objects, with more than fifty papers and book chapters devoted to the subject. He coauthored (2000, with Jennifer Doole and Peter Watson) the report Stealing History commissioned by the Museums Association and ICOM-UK to advise upon the illicit trade in cultural objects. He also co-edited Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, and the Antiquities Trade (2006, with Morag M. Kersel, Christina Luke and Kathryn Walker Tubb), Illicit Antiquities: The Theft of Culture and the Extinction of Archaeology (2002, with Kathryn Walker Tubb), and Trade in Illicit Antiquities: The Destruction of the World's Archaeological Heritage (2001, with Jennifer Doole and Colin Renfrew). He has worked on archaeological projects in the United Kingdom, Greece, and Jordan, and continues to work in Greece. His work can be found at and traffickingculture.org. ABOUT THE THINK TANK The Antiquities Coalition unites a diverse group of experts in the global fight against cultural racketeering: the illicit trade in art and antiquities. This plunder for profit funds crime, armed conflict, and violent extremist organizations around the world erasing our past and threatening our future. Through innovative and practical solutions, we tackle this challenge head on, empowering communities and countries in crisis. In 2016, as part of this mission, we launched the Antiquities Coalition Think Tank, joining forces with international experts, including leaders in the fields of preservation, business, law, security, and technology. Together, we are bringing high-quality and results-oriented research to the world's decision makers, especially those in the government and private sectors. Our goal is to strengthen policymakers understanding of the challenges facing our shared heritage, and more importantly, help them develop better solutions to protect it. However, the views expressed in these policy briefs are the author s own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Antiquities Coalition. We invite you to learn more at thinktank.theantiquitiescoalition.org.

3 The market for antiquities and other cultural property sold through online retailers and social media is skyrocketing. Source: Screenshot by Neil Brodie Executive Summary Despite rampant looting and trafficking of ancient art, public policy has failed to regulate the online antiquities trade, putting both businesses and good faith purchasers at risk of unknowingly facilitating criminal activity. This paper offers practical solutions aimed at raising consumer awareness and introducing workable regulation. Illicit antiquities, some pilfered from war zones where jihadist groups operate, are increasingly finding their way online where they are being snapped up by unknowing buyers and further driving the rampant plunder of archaeological sites. These internet sales are spurring a vicious cycle: increasing demand for antiquities, which drives the looting, producing a greater supply of artifacts, which further increases demand. While global auction sales of art and antiquities declined in 2015 falling as much as 11 percent online sales skyrocketed by 24 percent, reaching a staggering $3.27 billion dollars.1 According to Forbes, This suggests that the art market may not be cooling, exactly, but instead shifting to a new sales model, e-commerce. 2 How can an online buyer guarantee that a potential purchase is not stolen property, a blood antiquity, or a modern forgery? The best protection is to demand evidence of how the object reached the market in the first place. However, as in more traditional sales, most antiquities on the internet lack any such documentation. Online shoppers therefore have limited means of knowing what they are buying or from whom. This is a particularly serious concern given the industrial scale looting now taking place in Iraq and Syria, which the United Nations Security Council warns is financing Daesh (commonly known as ISIS, ISIL, or Islamic State), al Qaeda, and their affiliates. Despite the clear implications for both cultural preservation and national security, so far public policy has completely failed to regulate the online antiquities trade. This is particularly true in the United States, which remains the world s largest art market and a major center for the internet market in antiquities.3 American inaction has made it impossible to combat the problem globally, and moreover, is in great contrast to positive steps taken by other demand nations like Germany. 2

4 This paper offers practical solutions to help better protect good faith consumers from purchasing looted or fake antiquities while also protecting online businesses from facilitating criminal behavior. After briefly reviewing what is known of the organization and operation of the internet market in antiquities, it considers some possible cooperative responses aimed at educating consumers and introducing workable regulation. These responses draw upon the German example, as well as recent criminological thinking about what might constitute effective regulation. Finally, the paper makes seven policy recommendations, which while geared towards the American market, are applicable to any country where antiquities are bought and sold online. As this infographic shows, ecommerce may be the future of the antiquities trade, with huge consequences for our cultural heritage. Source: Neil Brodie and the Antiquities Coalition 3

5 Introduction The illicit antiquities trade damages and destroys cultural heritage, fosters criminality and corruption, and funds terrorism and other forms of armed violence. The online marketplace helps to drive demand for antiquities licit and illicit. Antiquities have been trafficked internationally since the time of the eighteenthcentury Grand Tour. They are clandestinely excavated from archaeological sites or forcibly removed from architectural remains, and then traded to be acquired by private and institutional collectors worldwide. This trafficking damages and destroys cultural heritage, fosters criminality and corruption, and funds terrorism and other forms of armed violence. The seriousness of the problems caused by the trade was recognized in 1970 by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) when it adopted the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property, which recommended standards for national curation of cultural heritage and established a series of rules and diplomatic procedures aimed at controlling the illicit trade. As satellite images of devastated archaeological sites in Syria and Iraq so graphically show, however, antiquities trafficking is getting worse, not better. One reason for its persistence and continuing depredations has been the development of a wideranging internet market in antiquities. Since the launch of ebay in 1995, the internet market in antiquities has grown to be a sophisticated and diversified commercial operation. Alongside the continuing existence of ebay, which offers a platform enabling private (consumer to consumer) transactions through auction, more traditional (business to consumer) businesses have established themselves. These include companies selling directly to the public from virtual galleries (termed here internet dealers) and those offering material for online auction (termed internet auctioneers). Since ebay s launch in 1995, the internet marketplace has become a sophisticated and diverse operation. It now enables many different types of business transactions. Source: Neil Brodie and the Antiquities Coalition 4

6 Also notable has been the appearance of internet malls or marketplaces, which gather together on one website links to a range of traders or members, all offering related types of material. Potential consumers can search or browse according to material or vendor. Trocadero, for example, links to the inventories of internet dealers in art and antiques, including antiquities; VCoins links to internet dealers in coins, including ancient coins. Invaluable and LiveAuctioneers among others provide a similar service for internet auctioneers.4 The Problem Experts have long warned the internet could contribute to an increase in antiquities looting and trafficking. As far back as 2006, the International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL), UNESCO, and the International Council of Museums (ICOM) warned about the damaging effect of this burgeoning internet marketplace on the world s cultural heritage. These institutions and other experts feared that the very nature of the online market would allow it to easily surpass the reach and scale of the traditional antiquities trade. Given the rules of supply and demand and that the only source of genuine artifacts is a limited number of archaeological sites this threatened an increase in antiquities looting and trafficking. The ongoing situation in Syria has confirmed those worst fears. In 2016, for example, the International Center for Terrorism and Transnational Crime in Ankara announced that since 2011 Turkish authorities had seized 6,800 objects, the majority of them coins.5 Trafficked coins and other small objects from Iraq and Syria are being sold openly and in great quantity on the internet.6 The online market s unique characteristics allow it to easily surpass the traditional trade. The internet allows for the participation of consumers from a much broader range of socioeconomic backgrounds than has previously been the case. For businesses and consumers both, the barriers to entry are much lower than in the past, when bricks and mortar shops were the norm. In fact this easy access actually works against traditional dealers who maintain physical galleries in expensive locations such as New York or London, and favors a new business model whereby large inventories can be stored in low-cost locations, yet sold around the world. Online galleries and auction platforms thus bring geographically distant buyers and sellers together in electronic space and in the process make it financially viable to trade in low-value and potentially high-volume material. This means that minor archaeological sites or cultural institutions, which previously may not have been worth looting and thus left intact by criminals, can now be viewed in a more lucrative light and targeted accordingly. The resultant trade in small, portable, and easy to conceal antiquities is less likely to make headlines than that in major works of ancient art, but it is more difficult to police and arguably more destructive to the historical record. Finally, archaeologists, traders, and consumers alike believe the internet market to be riddled with fakes.7 Internet apps and social media are also presenting new opportunities for criminals. Internet apps and social media are also offering new opportunities for criminals. For example, Skype and WhatsApp are being used by thieves and traffickers to arrange deals.8 When on May 16, 2015, U.S. Special Forces raided the Syrian compound of Abu Sayyaf, the head of Daesh s administrative section for the supervision of excavation and trade of antiquities, they discovered images of stolen antiquities in the WhatsApp folder of his cellphone.9 It is becoming increasingly common to see 5

7 antiquities offered for sale on sites such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube. It is also suspected that internet discussion forums might be used for such purposes.10 The online market continues to adapt and businesses also continue to adapt to it. For example, Christie s and Sotheby s have now moved into internet trading, which would have been unthinkable just years ago. Vendors can sell trafficked antiquities with seemingly little risk, since criminal investigations, prosecutions, and convictions have been rare. Certainly the one dependable constant of the internet market is that it is continually creating or adapting to new commercial opportunities. While the antiquities traditionally available for sale online have been low-end pieces or fakes, sold by anonymous or minor dealers, now the art world s leading institutions are also seeing a chance to grow their consumer base. For example, the two major auction houses, Sotheby s and Christie s, have moved into internet trading. In 2015, Sotheby s commenced live streaming some auctions on ebay, though does not yet seem to have gone down that route for antiquities. In 2011, Christie s established its own online platform, and in October 2016, offered for sale forty antiquities deaccessioned from the Toledo Museum of Art. The success of this sale could open the door to other such auctions in the future, further and significantly changing the face of the online antiquities marketplace. The participation of old and trusted companies like Christie s and Sotheby s will improve consumer confidence in online sales more generally. It is suspected that the darknet is being used to transact trafficked antiquities, but no evidence has been produced. One explanation may be that there is no need to use the darknet when trafficked antiquities can be sold openly on publicly accessible websites with seemingly little risk to the vendors. Between 2007 and 2010, working with Salvadoran police, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents cracked open a smuggling racket moving Salvadoran antiquities into the United States for sale on ebay, seizing and returning dozens of objects.11 But investigations such as this one are rare, and convictions rarer still. Coins sold through online auction sites provide an affordable opportunity for a middle class buyer to own a piece of the past. They are also one of the most easily trafficked artifacts due to their small size and portability. Source: Screenshot by Neil Brodie 6

8 Risk For Consumers The online antiquities trade may pose more serious risks to consumers than it As well as encouraging the looting and trafficking of the world s cultural heritage, the online antiquities trade also poses a number of serious risks to consumers. does to criminals. While an internet shopper may indeed be purchasing a real antiquity that was scientifically excavated in accordance with national law, and left its country of origin with a valid export permit, the odds are much greater of purchasing a trafficked or fake object. Again, buyers also risk the possibility of unintentionally supporting the organized criminals, armed insurgents, and violent extremist organizations who are known to deal in antiquities. A buyer s best protection is to demand As mentioned above, a buyer s best protection is demanding proof of provenance (an antiquity s ownership history), or even better provenience (its findspot in an archaeological excavation). Verifiable information about provenance and provenience allows a clear chain of ownership to be traced between an object s place of discovery and its sale, thus assuring its legitimacy and authenticity. When this chain is poorly recorded, and nothing is known of an object s history, it is easy to pass off a stolen object as legitimate and a fake object as genuine. Yet even a cursory search of the internet demonstrates that most antiquities are sold online without any secure documentation of either provenance or provenience, and furthermore, both can easily be forged. proof of provenance or provenience. While some internet dealers warn buyers to avoid fakes, there are fewer warnings to avoid looted or trafficked artifacts. Several internet dealers do provide lengthy advice on their websites about avoiding fakes on the market while proffering questionable guarantees of authenticity, but have less to say about trafficking. For example, one internet dealer seems more concerned about arbitrary customs seizures than trafficking when warning consumers that: Certain items listed on this site may be subject to various exportimport laws and other laws of the United States and other countries. It is the buyer's responsibility to obtain any relevant export or import licenses or other permits to ensure legal purchase, transport, and import of any item. We are not responsible for increasingly arbitrary customs seizures based on regulations of the purchaser's country. Please check with your customs before ordering. He is on firmer ground when reassuring consumers about the authenticity of his stock: The authenticity of all pieces is fully guaranteed for as long as you own them. Any item shown otherwise may be returned unaltered for a full refund. A Certificate of Authenticity with printed color image is available for an additional $10 fee. Any item not to your satisfaction may be returned unaltered within 7 days of receipt for a full refund less shipping. Statements such as these suggest sellers are trying to protect business by reassuring consumers about the authenticity of material offered for sale, while at the same time not frightening them off with talk of laws and law-breaking. Yet laws and law-breaking should be of particular concern to online shoppers of ancient art in the United States, which again remains the world s largest art market. 7

9 In the United States, selling, transporting, buying, and possessing illicit antiquities can be illegal. Under U.S. law the National Stolen Property Act (NSPA), the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act (CCPIA), and others sellers, transporters, buyers, and even possessors of illicit antiquities may find themselves subject to a number of civil and even criminal penalties. Additionally, under the CCPIA, the U.S. has bilateral agreements with sixteen nations, as well as emergency actions imposing similar terms for Iraq and Syria, which restrict the import of their antiquities into the United States. Antiquities that enter the country in violation of these agreements are subject to forfeiture. Homeland Security Investigations seized numerous pre-columbian artifacts after receiving information that an individual was attempting to sell looted Peruvian antiquities on ebay. Source: ICE Despite these risks, judging from the market s size, consumers appear undeterred. Yet consumers appear to be undeterred by these many risks, judging from the size of the market. Buoyant sales figures suggest that consumers are either unaware of the possible illicit or fraudulent sources of material up for sale, or know and do not care. Thus the internet market is flourishing in part because of widespread ignorance or indifference on the part of consumers to the issues involved. Policy Recommendations Poor consumer awareness is something that must be changed. As mentioned above, in response to growing concerns about the internet market, UNESCO, INTERPOL 8

10 In 2006, INTERPOL and others called on websites that offer antiquities for sale to post disclaimers on the illicit trade. and ICOM issued a joint warning on the online trade in They recommended that the following disclaimer be posted on any website offering antiquities for sale: With regard to cultural objects proposed for sale, and before buying them, buyers are advised to: i) check and request a verification of the licit provenance of the object, including documents providing evidence of legal export (and possibly import) of the object likely to have been imported; ii) request evidence of the seller s legal title. In case of doubt, check primarily with the national authorities of the country of origin and INTERPOL, and possibly with UNESCO or ICOM. Over a decade later, despite an extensive search by the author, this language is nowhere to be seen on websites offering antiquities for sale, and self-regulation appears to be largely non-existent. Posting a clear view statement on sales websites would be an easy and important first step to combat the illicit online trade. In particular, ebay has an unparalleled opportunity to improve consumer awareness. As a first step towards improving the market, all internet sales websites should be encouraged to display in clear view an unambiguous statement about acceptable provenance similar to this one recommended by ICOMINTERPOLUNESCO. Such a clear view statement on sales websites about the problems associated with no provenance and the measures necessary to establish good provenance might in itself do something to change the complacent attitudes of consumers as regards the absence of provenance. Ideally, the requirement for such a statement should be established in law, though that seems unlikely in the United States due to public and political opposition to statutory trade control. A voluntary strategy offers more promise of success. In particular, ebay has an unparalleled opportunity to improve consumer awareness, not just because it is a major player, but also because it is in its own interest to implement a solution. One reason for this is that antiquities sales account for only a very small part of its total turnover, so it might consider that avoidance of bad publicity and reputational harm would outweigh any financial loss incurred through frightening off consumers. Apart from the obvious material benefit of alerting buyers to the problems associated with unprovenanced antiquities, ebay also offers a way of reaching out to the broader consumer base. People buying from ebay are likely to be buying from other sales sites. Thus clear statements on ebay alerting buyers to the legal requirements and damaging consequences of purchasing unprovenanced antiquities offer an otherwise unavailable means of informing consumers who are unaware of the issues involved. ebay policy statements can in effect be used as bulletin boards. Today ebay shoppers can buy an antiquity without any warning of potential risks despite the fact that ebay itself regulates antiquities sales in both Germany and the United States. Yet, as of today, most ebay shoppers can search for and purchase an antiquity without any notice of the potential risks associated with purchasing unprovenanced antiquities. This is true despite the fact that ebay itself already does regulate the sale of antiquities through rules published in its policy statements about prohibited and restricted items. These vary slightly from country to country. In Germany, for example, a clear definition of an antiquity is provided and it is stated that an antiquity can only be offered for sale if accompanied by valid documentation of legal export from its country of origin. It is prohibited to sell any object listed on ICOM Red Lists, which illustrate and describe for the benefit of customs agents, traders and collectors types of objects that are at risk of theft and trafficking. In the United States, antiquities are defined as items of cultural significance from anywhere in the world and, it is stated that an antiquity can only be offered 9

11 for sale if accompanied by an image (if available) of valid documentation of legal export from its country of origin. ebay s German and U.S. written rules are broadly in line with the 2006 ICOMINTERPOLUNESCO recommendations. These rules are aimed at potential sellers, but could also alert buyers to what might constitute a genuine object and legitimate purchase. Artifacts on sites like ebay can reach thousands of dollars and are often sold with little or no provenance. Source: Screenshot by Neil Brodie Unfortunately, existing rules are generally unenforced, and moreover not even visible to potential consumers. Unfortunately, in the United States, not only are these rules generally unenforced, again they are not even visible to potential consumers. At present, from the ebay home page it is a four-click path starting from a small print policy heading at the foot of the page to the statement of regulations. From the same home page it is a separate four-click path to the antiquities sales pages. At no point do these paths intersect and it is possible for a buyer to reach the sales pages without needing to view the rules. The United Kingdom is an exception. There ebay has instated a pop-up window for potential vendors of domestic antiquities advising them of legal requirements. This could serve as a model for other antiquities sales as well as other countries. Ideally, across all ebay platforms, the sales regulations should appear in a pop-up window that has to be checked in acknowledgement by a potential buyer before 1 0

12 proceeding to the sales pages. If that is not possible, it should be ensured that the click-path from home page to sales pages navigates through the statement of rules. Raising consumer awareness can only do so much more must be done to monitor antiquities for sale. Raising consumer awareness in itself can only achieve so much. There will always be naïve or unaccommodating consumers looking for a bargain or a special piece and who are prepared to buy unprovenanced antiquities. Traders must be persuaded or induced to adopt and comply with regulations concerning provenance. To achieve this end, more needs to be done in terms of monitoring antiquities offered for sale. Despite their similar rules on paper about the provision of provenance documentation, more antiquities are offered for sale without provenance in the United States than in Germany (for example, a quick search of ebay by the author revealed none offered in Germany, but hundreds in the United States). Indeed, most antiquities are offered for sale in the United States with no indications of provenance, while the reverse seems to be true in Germany. These different standards of regulatory compliance are likely due to the presence (in Germany) or absence (in the United States) of external oversight. For example, in Germany, state representatives monitor online antiquities sales, which could prove a model for the United States. In Germany, monitoring and oversight are provided by state representatives of the Landesdenkmalpflege, legally mandated organizations within each state (Land) responsible for the protection and conservation of cultural heritage. In the United States, there does not appear to be an appointed responsible monitor of that sort. Thus the example of ebay USA shows that in the absence of effective oversight regulation is likely to fail. Concerned public or professional bodies such as the National Park Service, the Smithsonian Institution, or one of the major archaeological societies need to step up and respond to the challenge. The German model is exemplary. The simple rule for non-domestic antiquities that an offered antiquity has to be accompanied by an image of valid export documentation should reduce to a minimum the time burden of monitoring. Clearly, documents can be forged, but only at increased risk to the trader. Creating false provenance is fraud, and puts traders at risk of indictment for fraud, which is easier to prove than theft, giving better opportunities to law enforcement. ebay has shown itself in Germany to be amenable to an effective combination of regulation and external oversight. The situation with other internet dealers and auctioneers whose livelihoods are at stake is not so promising, as they are likely to refuse externally-monitored regulation. They might respond, however, to a more critical (and skeptical) consumer base. Encouraging consumers to buy from closely monitored and regulated ebay sales might draw business away from poorly regulated sales sites, and encourage some dealers or auctioneers at least to adopt similar policies of regulation and oversight. In the absence of state monitoring, nongovernmental organizations could fill the gap. Even in the absence of regulation, concerned organizations and individuals should be prepared to monitor internet sales for the presence of identifiably stolen or trafficked antiquities. In Korea, for example, the Overseas Korean Heritage Foundation monitors more than 4000 online auction houses, which are gathered on several marketplace platforms. It identifies between 20 and 200 Korean objects every week and notifies relevant national museums and police agencies. Since the monitoring program began in 2014, seven objects have been recovered. Given the widespread criminality of the antiquities trade and its financial connections with organized crime and terrorism, criminal wrongdoing on the part of 11

13 Law enforcement should also focus on investigating and prosecuting online traffickers not seizing and repatriating looted antiquities. internet dealers or auctioneers should be prosecuted and punished. The emphasis should be on convicting criminals and removing them from the market. The seizure of material in itself does not exert a deterrent effect, it simply increases the cost of doing business (as demonstrated by attorney Ricardo St. Hilaire in his Antiquities Coalition Policy Brief How to End Impunity for Antiquities Traffickers: Assemble a Cultural Heritage Crimes Prosecution Team ). There have been a few convictions of people offering stolen antiquities on ebay, but they are the small fish of the antiquities market pond and their convictions have had no discernible material or deterrent effect. One or two high-profile and wellpublicized convictions for illegal trade with associated custodial sentencing might send a chastening message, alerting more upmarket dealers and auctioneers who choose to ignore warnings about the legal pitfalls of trading in unprovenanced antiquities, something that the poorly-publicized convictions of small-time ebay traders has signally failed to do. Without prosecution of criminal wrongdoing, the trade will persist. Conclusion The internet market in stolen and trafficked antiquities is having a destructive impact on cultural heritage worldwide. It appears to be largely out of control. A new policy aimed at improving consumer awareness in combination with measures of voluntary regulation and oversight supported by vigorous law enforcement when appropriate will encourage the emergence of a legitimate trade and go some way to ridding the internet of its scourge of trafficked and faked antiquities. All internet sales websites should be encouraged and preferably required to display in clear view an unambiguous statement about acceptable provenance of objects sold, similar to the one recommended by ICOMINTERPOLUNESCO. These websites should be encouraged and preferably required to display in clear view a warning about the prevalence of fake antiquities and explain why authenticity cannot be guaranteed without verifiable provenance and find spot and expert or scientific examination. In the United States, these websites should be encouraged and preferably required to display in clear view an explanation of the governing U.S. law, including the relevant provisions of the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act (CCPIA) and bilateral agreements or memoranda of understanding (MOUs). Sites should also consider including a link to the Cultural Property Protection page of the U.S. Department of State (http: eca.state.govcultural-heritage-centercultural-property-protection). ebay, as the leading online auction platform, should take the lead in incorporating the preceding three recommendations into their policy statements about prohibited and restricted items. Professional bodies or other independent organizations with the necessary authority and expertise should advocate for these recommendations, and 1 2

14 moreover, be prepared in agreement with ebay and other online dealers and auctioneers to monitor sales regularly to ensure compliance. These professional bodiesindependent organizations should also be prepared to monitor other internet sales sites regularly to identify stolen and trafficked antiquities and work with law enforcement. Criminal investigations of illicit trade should focus on the internet dealers and auctioneers themselves, not the antiquities they sell. The aim should be removing criminals from the market, not recovering and repatriating stolen material. The internet market in antiquities presents a clear and present danger to the survival of the world s cultural heritage. But it is not a black or clandestine market, it operates in full public view. It is out in the open and almost inviting of monitoring, oversight and investigation. So although the internet market appears to be out of control, it can be brought under control by systematic and sustained policies as recommended here. The challenge is how best to implement them. Sources And Further Reading Barker, Alex Ethics, E-Commerce, and the Future of the Past. SAA Bulletin 18, no saa13.html. Brodie, Neil The Internet Market in Precolumbian Antiquities. In Cultural Property Crime: An Overview and Analysis on Contemporary Perspectives and Trends, edited by Joris Kila and Marc Balcells, Leiden: Brill. Brodie, Neil The Internet Market in Antiquities. In Countering Illicit Traffic in Cultural Goods: The Global Challenge of Protecting the World s Heritage, edited by France Desmarais, Paris: ICOM. Bruhns, Karen SAA Bulletin 18, no. 2. http: Chippindale, Christopher, and David Gill On-line Auctions: A New Venue for the Antiquities Market. Culture Without Context, no. 9: Fay, Emily Virtual Artifacts: ebay, Antiquities, and Authenticity. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice 27: Kreder, Jennifer, and Jason Nintrup Antiquity Meets the Modern Age: ebay s Potential Criminal Liability for Fake and Stolen International Antiquity Sales. Case Western Reserve Journal of Law, Technology and the Internet 5: Lidington, Helen The Role of the Internet in Removing the Shackles of the Saleroom : Anytime, Anyplace, Anything, Anywhere. Public Archaeology 2:

15 Takla, Hany N The Massacre in San Jose The Sale of Dismembered Manuscripts of Christian Egypt on ebay. In Synaxis katholike, edited by Diliana Atanassova and Tinatin Chronz, Vienna: LIT. Van Ham, Tom, Leukfeldt, Rutger, Bremmers, Bo, Stol, Wouter and Anton van Wijk The Art of the Internet: A Study of Illegal Online Trading in Cultural Goods. The Hague: Eleven International Publishing. 1 4

16 Endnotes 1 Hiscox, The Hiscox Online Art Trade Report 2016: Bringing transparency to the online art market https: 2 Deborah Weinswig. Art Market Cooling, But Online Sales Booming, Forbes, May 13, sitesdeborahweinswig art-market-cooling-but-online-sales-booming#13d8476ec9a6. 3 Neil Brodie. edited by Lawrence Rothfield, The Western Market in Iraqi Antiquities, Antiquities Under Siege, (2008), pp Lanham: AltaMira, at Trocadero. Vcoins. Invaluable. http: Steven Lee Myers and Nicholas Kulish, Broken System Allows ISIS to Profit from Looted Antiquities, New York Times, January 9, Neil Brodie, Trafficking out of Syria, Market of Mass Destruction blog, July 27, http: Neil Brodie, Last week, the Art Loss Register was endorsing, Market of Mass Destruction blog, May 30, Neil Brodie, ebaywatch (1), Market of Mass Destruction blog, February 19, http: 7 Charles Stanish, Forging Ahead, Archaeology Vol. 62, No. 3, MayJune insider.html. 8 Mike Giglio, and Munzer al-awad, Inside the Underground Trade to Sell Off Syria s History. BuzzFeedNews, July 30, Steven Lee Myers, and Nicholas Kulish, Broken System Allows ISIS to Profit from Looted Antiquities. New York Times, January 9, United States of America v. One Gold Ring with Carved Gemstone, an Asset of Isil, Discovered on Electronic Media of Abu Sayyaf, President of Isil Antiquities Department; One Gold Coin Featuring Antoninus Pius, an Asset of Isil, Discovered on Electronic Media of Abu Sayyaf, President of Isil Antiquities Department; One Gold Coin Featuring Emperor Hadrian Augustus Caesar, an Asset of Isil, Discovered on Electronic Media of Abu Sayyaf, President Of Isil Antiquities Department; One Carved Neo-Assyrian Stone Stela, an Asset of Isil, Discovered on Electronic Media of Abu Sayyaf, President of Isil Antiquities Department. Civil Action Complaint, December 15, download (accessed 18 April 2017), It is noticeable that while the language of choice for most internet dealers and auctioneers is English, or at least a European language, material on social media is often described or discussed in a non-european local language. It might be that social media is being used more to facilitate trafficking than to promote the retail sale of already trafficked objects. 11 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, ICE, CBP and El Salvador Celebrate Recovery of Pre-Columbian Artifacts in Joint Investigation into Smuggling Ring Selling on E-Bay, News Release, May 12, releases washingtondc.htm. 1 5

COSTA RICA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970

COSTA RICA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 Report on the application of the 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property COSTA RICA I. Information on the implementation

More information

I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 (with reference to its provisions)

I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 (with reference to its provisions) Paris, Ref: CL/4102 Report by Sweden on the implementation of 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property I. Information

More information

MEASURES FOR PROTECTION OF CULTURAL OBJECTS AND THE ISSUE OF THEIR ILLICIT TRAFFICKING

MEASURES FOR PROTECTION OF CULTURAL OBJECTS AND THE ISSUE OF THEIR ILLICIT TRAFFICKING Committee: UNESCO MEASURES FOR PROTECTION OF CULTURAL OBJECTS AND THE ISSUE OF THEIR ILLICIT TRAFFICKING I. INTRODUCTION OF THE TOPIC Protection of cultural objects in the world is an increasingly important

More information

PROTECTING CULTURAL HERITAGE

PROTECTING CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTING CULTURAL HERITAGE AN IMPERATIVE FOR HUMANITY ACTING TOGETHER AGAINST DESTRUCTION AND TRAFFICKING OF CULTURAL PROPERTY BY TERRORIST AND ORGANIZED CRIME GROUPS United Nations 22 September 2016

More information

Archaeologists and criminologists are looking at ways to combat the illicit trade in antiquities.

Archaeologists and criminologists are looking at ways to combat the illicit trade in antiquities. Subscribe (/subscribe) (/) Trafficking Culture By Donna Yates (/author/donna-yates) Posted 2nd June 2015, 10:30 Archaeologists and criminologists are looking at ways to combat the illicit trade in antiquities.

More information

REPUBLIC OF KOREA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970

REPUBLIC OF KOREA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 Report on the application of the 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property REPUBLIC OF KOREA I. Information on

More information

NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE

NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FINLAND NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 1970 CONVENTION ON THE MEANS OF PROHIBITING AND PREVENTING THE ILLICIT IMPORT, EXPORT AND TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF CULTURAL PROPERTY 2011-2015 FINLAND

More information

I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 (with reference to its provisions)

I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 (with reference to its provisions) SWAZILAND NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 1970 CONVENTION ON THE MEANS OF PROHIBITING AND PREVENTING THE ILLICIT IMPORT, EXPORT AND TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF CULTURAL PROPERTY 2011 2015 I.

More information

Fifth session Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room XI May Item 8 of the Provisional Agenda: Actions taken by UNESCO s Partners

Fifth session Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room XI May Item 8 of the Provisional Agenda: Actions taken by UNESCO s Partners 5 SC C70/17/5.SC/INF4 Paris, April 2017 Original: English Limited Distribution Fifth Session of the Subsidiary Committee of the Meeting of States Parties to the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and

More information

SUMMARY. This agenda item has no financial and administrative implications. Action expected of the Executive Board: proposed decision in paragraph 3.

SUMMARY. This agenda item has no financial and administrative implications. Action expected of the Executive Board: proposed decision in paragraph 3. Executive Board Hundred and eighty-fourth session 184 EX/25 PARIS, 26 February 2010 Original: French Item 25 of the provisional agenda CONSIDERATION OF THE DRAFT GUIDELINES FOR THE PREPARATION OF REPORTS

More information

The Possibility of a Swedish Market for Antiquities Looted From Conflict and War Zones: A Risk Analysis

The Possibility of a Swedish Market for Antiquities Looted From Conflict and War Zones: A Risk Analysis The Possibility of a Swedish Market for Antiquities Looted From Conflict and War Zones: A Risk Analysis Financed by the Swedish National Heritage Board 1 A Cooperation Between Swedish Police Departement

More information

SLOVAKIA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of Ratification of the Convention

SLOVAKIA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of Ratification of the Convention SLOVAKIA NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 1970 CONVENTION ON THE MEANS OF PROHIBITING AND PREVENTING THE ILLICIT IMPORT, EXPORT AND TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF CULTURAL PROPERTY 2011 2015 Report

More information

ILLICIT TRADE IN CULTURAL ARTEFACTS: STRONGER TOGETHER?

ILLICIT TRADE IN CULTURAL ARTEFACTS: STRONGER TOGETHER? ILLICIT TRADE IN CULTURAL ARTEFACTS: STRONGER TOGETHER? The way forward UNESCO s actions to prevent illicit trade Oslo, Norway 2-3 December 2015 UNESCO Culture Conventions 2 INTERPOL For official use only

More information

Prevention and Fight Against Illicit Traffic of Cultural Goods in Southern Africa

Prevention and Fight Against Illicit Traffic of Cultural Goods in Southern Africa Prevention and Fight Against Illicit Traffic of Cultural Goods in Southern Africa Current Situation and Way Forward 14 and 15 September 2011 Safari Hotel, Windhoek, Namibia UNESCOS ACTION IN THE FIGHT

More information

Security Council. Topic B: Protection of Natural Resources and Cultural Heritage from Terrorism and Transnational Organized Crime

Security Council. Topic B: Protection of Natural Resources and Cultural Heritage from Terrorism and Transnational Organized Crime Security Council Topic B: Protection of Natural Resources and Cultural Heritage from Terrorism and Transnational Organized Crime Terrorists raise money through the oil trade, extortion, kidnapping for

More information

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 18 December [on the report of the Third Committee (A/69/489)]

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 18 December [on the report of the Third Committee (A/69/489)] United Nations A/RES/69/196 General Assembly Distr.: General 26 January 2015 Sixty-ninth session Agenda item 105 Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 18 December 2014 [on the report of the Third

More information

Economic and Social Council

Economic and Social Council United Nations Economic and Social Council Distr.: General 4 May 2012 Original: English Expert group on protection against trafficking in cultural property Vienna, 27-29 June 2012 Item 2 (b) of the provisional

More information

Case: 3:12-cv JGC Doc #: 1 Filed: 06/20/12 1 of 10. PageID #: 1

Case: 3:12-cv JGC Doc #: 1 Filed: 06/20/12 1 of 10. PageID #: 1 Case: 3:12-cv-01582-JGC Doc #: 1 Filed: 06/20/12 1 of 10. PageID #: 1 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION United States of America, v. Plaintiff, One

More information

Cairo, Egypt, 31 March-2 April The 1970 Convention: Present implementation and future challenges

Cairo, Egypt, 31 March-2 April The 1970 Convention: Present implementation and future challenges Cairo, Egypt, 31 March-2 April 2014 The 1970 Convention: Present implementation and future challenges INTRODUCTION Q1: Why is UNESCO so engaged in protecting cultural objects? By its Constitution (mandate

More information

Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime

Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime United Nations CTOC/COP/2010/12* Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime Distr.: General 13 August 2010 Original: English Fifth session Vienna,

More information

TEXTS ADOPTED Provisional edition. Destruction of cultural sites perpetrated by ISIS/Da'esh

TEXTS ADOPTED Provisional edition. Destruction of cultural sites perpetrated by ISIS/Da'esh European Parliament 204-209 TEXTS ADOPTED Provisional edition P8_TA-PROV(205)079 Destruction of cultural sites perpetrated by ISIS/Da'esh European Parliament resolution of 30 April 205 on the destruction

More information

UNESCO CONCEPT PAPER

UNESCO CONCEPT PAPER MUS-12/1.EM/INF.2 Paris, 5 July 2012 Original: English / French UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION EXPERT MEETING ON THE PROTECTION AND PROMOTION OF MUSEUMS AND COLLECTIONS

More information

Key aspects of the new Act on the Protection of Cultural Property in Germany

Key aspects of the new Act on the Protection of Cultural Property in Germany Key aspects of the new Act on the Protection of Cultural Property in Germany 1 Publication data Published by: Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media Press Office of the Federal Government

More information

NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE

NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE JAPAN NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 1970 CONVENTION ON THE MEANS OF PROHIBITING AND PREVENTING THE ILLICIT IMPORT, EXPORT AND TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF CULTURAL PROPERTY 2011-2015 1 I. Information

More information

EU response to the illicit trade in cultural goods

EU response to the illicit trade in cultural goods EU response to the illicit trade in cultural goods May 2018 Chiara Bellani European Commission Directorate General for Education, Youth, Sport and 1. EU competence Supporting in the field of culture Art.

More information

Following the Money to Combat Terrorism, Crime and Corruption

Following the Money to Combat Terrorism, Crime and Corruption Following the Money to Combat Terrorism, Crime and Corruption ACAMS Houston Chapter April 19, 2017 Celina B. Realuyo Professor of Practice William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies, National

More information

Emergency Safeguarding of the Syrian Cultural Heritage Project

Emergency Safeguarding of the Syrian Cultural Heritage Project Emergency Safeguarding of the Syrian Cultural Heritage Project Target country or region Syria Funding source European Union with a co-financing by the Government of Flanders Total budget 2.750.000 EUR

More information

The present Questionnaire is prepared in application of the aforementioned decision of the Subsidiary Committee.

The present Questionnaire is prepared in application of the aforementioned decision of the Subsidiary Committee. Questionnaire for States parties to UNESCO s Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property INTRODUCTORY REMARKS At the

More information

Operation Pandora shows that Europe is NOT a haven for cultural property looted from war zones

Operation Pandora shows that Europe is NOT a haven for cultural property looted from war zones INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF DEALERS IN ANCIENT ART Operation Pandora shows that Europe is NOT a haven for cultural property looted from war zones Operation Pandora was successful, contrary to that what

More information

Red List of Cambodian Antiquities at Risk Fighting the illicit traffic of cultural property

Red List of Cambodian Antiquities at Risk Fighting the illicit traffic of cultural property PRESS FILE Red List of Cambodian Antiquities at Risk Fighting the illicit traffic of cultural property Press Conference, June 15, 2010 French School of Asian Studies (EFEO), Paris Contact: Stanislas Tarnowski.

More information

GHANA MUSEUMS AND MONUMENTS BOARD. Ghana Museums and Monuments Board

GHANA MUSEUMS AND MONUMENTS BOARD. Ghana Museums and Monuments Board GHANA MUSEUMS AND MONUMENTS BOARD GHANA MUSEUMS AND MONUMENTS BOARD GHANA MUSEUMS AND MONUMENTS BOARD (NATIONAL MUSEUM) P.O BOX GP 3343 ACCRA. GHANA Tel: +233 (0302) 22 16 33/35 Email: gmmb-acc@africaonline.com.gh

More information

MACEDONIA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970

MACEDONIA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 Report on the application of the 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property MACEDONIA I. Information on the implementation

More information

Development of the UNESCO Database of National Cultural Heritage Laws Phase III. Project proposal

Development of the UNESCO Database of National Cultural Heritage Laws Phase III. Project proposal Development of the UNESCO Database of National Cultural Heritage Laws Phase III Project proposal 1 1. Identification of the Action 1. Title of the Action Development of the UNESCO Database of National

More information

The United Nations study on fraud and the criminal misuse and falsification of identity

The United Nations study on fraud and the criminal misuse and falsification of identity The United Nations study on fraud and the criminal misuse and falsification of identity Facts and figures Total volume of fraud losses for the UK in 2005 was US$ 27.4 billion (ACPO study). Online banking

More information

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE WORLD CULTURAL AND NATURAL HERITAGE

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE WORLD CULTURAL AND NATURAL HERITAGE Limited Distribution WHC-97/CONF.208/15 Paris, 23 September, 1997 Original: English UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE WORLD CULTURAL

More information

Trainers and facilitators:

Trainers and facilitators: TRAINING TO FIGHT ILLICIT TRAFFICKING OF SYRIAN CULTURAL PROPERTIES SUPPORTED BY: In the framework of the project: Emergency Safeguarding of the Syrian Cultural Heritage Beirut, Lebanon 10-14 November

More information

NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE

NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE . CZECH REPUBLIC NATIONAL REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 1970 CONVENTION ON THE MEANS OF PROHIBITING AND PREVENTING THE ILLICIT IMPORT, EXPORT AND TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF CULTURAL PROPERTY 2011 2015

More information

We can support the Commission text. We can support the Commission text

We can support the Commission text. We can support the Commission text Draft Regulation on the Import of Cultural Goods COM(2017)375: Comments by the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) and the Consortium of European Research Libraries

More information

13647/1/15 REV 1 MM/lv 1 DG E - 1C

13647/1/15 REV 1 MM/lv 1 DG E - 1C Council of the European Union Brussels, 12 November 2015 (OR. en) 13647/1/15 REV 1 CULT 78 RELEX 873 UD 213 NOTE From: To: General Secretariat of the Council Permanent Representatives Committee/Council

More information

UNODC/CCPCJ/EG.1/2014/3

UNODC/CCPCJ/EG.1/2014/3 Distr.: General 24 January 2014 Original: English Report on the meeting of the expert group on protection against trafficking in cultural property held in Vienna from 15 to 17 January 2014 I. Introduction

More information

ISIL and the Illicit Antiquities Trade

ISIL and the Illicit Antiquities Trade JOHN PIPKINS ISIL and the Illicit Antiquities Trade John Pipkins John Pipkins holds a Master of Arts in Security Policy Studies from the Elliott School of International Affairs at The George Washington

More information

Ill-gotten gains: how many museums have stolen objects in their collections?

Ill-gotten gains: how many museums have stolen objects in their collections? Ill-gotten gains: how many museums have stolen objects in their collections? Met's move to return two statues to Cambodia among many disputed objects worldwide Carl Franzen 13 May 2013 The Verge The prestigious

More information

COLLECTING CULTURAL MATERIAL. Ministry for the Arts. Ministry for the Arts AUSTRALIAN BEST PRACTICE GUIDE TO. Attorney-General s Department

COLLECTING CULTURAL MATERIAL. Ministry for the Arts. Ministry for the Arts AUSTRALIAN BEST PRACTICE GUIDE TO. Attorney-General s Department AUSTRALIAN BEST PRACTICE GUIDE TO COLLECTING CULTURAL MATERIAL Attorney-General s Department Ministry for the Arts AUSTRALIAN BEST PRACTICE GUIDE TO COLLECTING CULTURAL MATERIAL Ministry for the Arts i

More information

Federal Act on the International Transfer of Cultural Property

Federal Act on the International Transfer of Cultural Property Please note that this English translation is not legally binding. Legally binding are the original law texts in an official Swiss Language such as German, French and Italian. Federal Act on the International

More information

The Current Fight Against Contraband Art And Antiquities

The Current Fight Against Contraband Art And Antiquities Portfolio Media. Inc. 111 West 19 th Street, 5th Floor New York, NY 10011 www.law360.com Phone: +1 646 783 7100 Fax: +1 646 783 7161 customerservice@law360.com The Current Fight Against Contraband Art

More information

Measures against the illicit trade in cultural objects: the emerging strategy in Britain

Measures against the illicit trade in cultural objects: the emerging strategy in Britain Measures against the illicit trade in cultural objects: the emerging strategy in Britain David Gaimster 1 Until recently the UK was notorious for its illicit market in unlawfully removed art and antiquities

More information

BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970

BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA. I. Information on the implementation of the UNESCO Convention of 1970 Report on the application of the 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA I. Information

More information

UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property (1970)

UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property (1970) UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property (1970) Article 1 For the purposes of this Convention, the term `cultural property'

More information

EU's response to illicit trade in cultural goods

EU's response to illicit trade in cultural goods EU's response to illicit trade in cultural goods 18 May 2017 Anna Kędziorek Ramirez 1. EU competence Supporting in the field of culture Shared in the field of internal market Directive 2014/60 of 15 May

More information

EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM. 1. General

EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM. 1. General Disclaimer This is the Explanatory Memorandum to the Rijkswet tot goedkeuring van de op 14 november 1970 te Parijs tot stand gekomen Overeenkomst inzake de middelen om de onrechtmatige invoer, uitvoer

More information

Committee on International Trade Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection

Committee on International Trade Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection European Parliament 2014-2019 Committee on International Trade Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection 26.3.2018 2017/0158(COD) ***I DRAFT REPORT on the proposal for a regulation of the

More information

א*()'&א$#"! א& 0(1 /(א.-,+*()א&%$#"! 2+234

א*()'&א$#! א& 0(1 /(א.-,+*()א&%$#! 2+234 Paris 2001 Conférence générale 31e session Rapport General Conference 31st session Report Conferencia General 31 a reunión Informe Генеральная конференция 31-я сессия Доклад א*()'&א$#"! א& 0(1 /(א.-,+*()א&%$#"!

More information

PANEL 18 ILLEGALLY TRADED CULTURAL ARTIFACTS: WILL THE MUSEUMS SHOWING ANCIENT ARTIFACTS BE EMPTY SOON? Malcolm (Max) Howlett, Sciaroni & Associates.

PANEL 18 ILLEGALLY TRADED CULTURAL ARTIFACTS: WILL THE MUSEUMS SHOWING ANCIENT ARTIFACTS BE EMPTY SOON? Malcolm (Max) Howlett, Sciaroni & Associates. PANEL 18 ILLEGALLY TRADED CULTURAL ARTIFACTS: WILL THE MUSEUMS SHOWING ANCIENT ARTIFACTS BE EMPTY SOON? Malcolm (Max) Howlett, Sciaroni & Associates. The Hypothetical For decades, Cambodian art has been

More information

Roma Lyon Group s First Report on the Implementation of the G7 Action Plan on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism

Roma Lyon Group s First Report on the Implementation of the G7 Action Plan on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism Roma Lyon Group s First Report on the Implementation of the G7 Action Plan on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism Introduction At the Ise Shima Summit in 2016, the G7 Heads of State and Government

More information

SANCTIONS INTELLIGENCE. January 15, 2015

SANCTIONS INTELLIGENCE. January 15, 2015 January 15, 2015 SANCTIONS INTELLIGENCE UPDATE commerical operations in turkey: assessing exposure to islamic state, al qaida, and other armed groups in iraq and syria Overview A review of Islamic State

More information

Illegal movement and transfer of large amounts of cultural objects from the place of origin to a foreign abode

Illegal movement and transfer of large amounts of cultural objects from the place of origin to a foreign abode Workshop on the Prevention and Fight Against Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Goods, Namibia (Windhoek) 14 th - 15 th September 2011 1 Illegal movement and transfer of large amounts of cultural objects

More information

SENATOR THE HON. CHRISTOPHER ELLISON Minister for Justice and Customs Senator for Western Australia Manager of Government Business in the Senate

SENATOR THE HON. CHRISTOPHER ELLISON Minister for Justice and Customs Senator for Western Australia Manager of Government Business in the Senate SENATOR THE HON. CHRISTOPHER ELLISON Minister for Justice and Customs Senator for Western Australia Manager of Government Business in the Senate 1. Secretary General Costa, distinguished delegates: 2.

More information

TRANSNATIONAL CRIME - A THREAT TO REGIONAL ECONOMIC SECURITY

TRANSNATIONAL CRIME - A THREAT TO REGIONAL ECONOMIC SECURITY TRANSNATIONAL CRIME - A THREAT TO REGIONAL ECONOMIC SECURITY Ph.D. Professor Florin TUDOR 1 Abstract: Transnational organized crime has become a key issue in international affairs and, unfortunately, one

More information

FORMAT FOR NATIONAL REPORTS. Four-year cycle

FORMAT FOR NATIONAL REPORTS. Four-year cycle FORMAT FOR NATIONAL REPORTS Four-year cycle 2013-2016 National report on the implementation of the Hague Convention of 1954 and its two Protocols (1954 and 1999) This form must be submitted electronically.

More information

Ac t on the Protection of Cultural Property

Ac t on the Protection of Cultural Property Germany Courtesy translation Act amending the law on the protection of cultural property * Date: 31 July 2016 The Bundestag has adopted the following Act with the approval of the Bundesrat: Ac t on the

More information

San Diego District Attorney

San Diego District Attorney San Diego District Attorney ROBERT C. PHILLIPS Deputy District Attorney Law Enforcement Liaison Deputy 858-974-2421 (W) 619-892-2338 (C) (E) Robert.Phillips@SDSheriff.org (E) RCPhill808@aol.com DISPOSITION

More information

Original English Draft Operational Guidelines of the UNESCO 1970 Convention (Second draft, January 2014) Table of Contents

Original English Draft Operational Guidelines of the UNESCO 1970 Convention (Second draft, January 2014) Table of Contents Original English Draft Operational Guidelines of the UNESCO 1970 Convention (Second draft, January 2014) Table of Contents Chapter Paragraph(s) Acronyms and abbreviations Introduction 1-7 Purpose of these

More information

COMMITTEE ON OFFENCES RELATING TO CULTURAL PROPERTY (PC-IBC)

COMMITTEE ON OFFENCES RELATING TO CULTURAL PROPERTY (PC-IBC) Strasbourg, 3 November 2016 pc-ibc/documents/2016/pc-ibc(2016)06_en PC-IBC (2016) 06_en EUROPEAN COMMITTEE ON CRIME PROBLEMS (CDPC) COMMITTEE ON OFFENCES RELATING TO CULTURAL PROPERTY (PC-IBC) Draft Explanatory

More information

Third Meeting Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room II May 2015

Third Meeting Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room II May 2015 3 MSP C70/15/3.MSP/8 Paris, April 2015 Original English Limited distribution Meeting of States Parties to the UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and

More information

NEWS FROM THE GETTY news.getty.edu

NEWS FROM THE GETTY news.getty.edu NEWS FROM THE GETTY news.getty.edu gettycommunications@getty.edu The Timeline: BACKGROUNDER Statue of a Victorious Youth (The Getty Bronze) June 2018 The statue of a Victorious Youth was originally found

More information

1267/1989/2253 ISIL (Da esh) & Al-Qaida Sanctions Committee - Monitoring Team

1267/1989/2253 ISIL (Da esh) & Al-Qaida Sanctions Committee - Monitoring Team 1267/1989/2253 IIL (Da esh) & Al-Qaida anctions Committee - Monitoring Team United Nations ecurity Council Action Against Terrorist Revenue Generation Via Looting and muggling of Antiquities Paris: 29

More information

WHC-12/36.COM/INF.5A.1

WHC-12/36.COM/INF.5A.1 World Heritage 36 COM WHC-12/36.COM/INF.5A.1 Paris, 11 May 2012 Original: English / French UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION CONVENTION CONCERNING THE PROTECTION OF THE WORLD

More information

Red List of Cambodian Antiquities at Risk Fighting the illicit traffic of cultural property

Red List of Cambodian Antiquities at Risk Fighting the illicit traffic of cultural property Fighting the illicit traffic of cultural property Press conference, 9 February 2010 National Museum of Cambodia, Phnom Penh Contact: Jennifer Thevenot Email: programmes@icom.museum Tel: + 33 (0)1 47 34

More information

Address by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO on the occasion of the visit to the Flemish Parliament

Address by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO on the occasion of the visit to the Flemish Parliament Address by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO on the occasion of the visit to the Flemish Parliament A New Multilateralism to Tackle New Challenges Brussels, 9 June 2016 The Honourable Mr Jan Peumans,

More information

SECRETARIAT S REPORT ON ITS ACTIVITIES (OCTOBER MAY 2017)

SECRETARIAT S REPORT ON ITS ACTIVITIES (OCTOBER MAY 2017) SECRETARIAT S REPORT ON ITS ACTIVITIES (OCTOBER 2016 - MAY 2017) Fifth Session of the Subsidiary Committee of the Meeting of States Parties to the Convention concerning the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing

More information

Addis Abeba International Conference. Italian Experience and Framework on Asset Recovery in Fighting and Cracking Down Organized Crime and Corruption

Addis Abeba International Conference. Italian Experience and Framework on Asset Recovery in Fighting and Cracking Down Organized Crime and Corruption Addis Abeba International Conference Italian Experience and Framework on Asset Recovery in Fighting and Cracking Down Organized Crime and Corruption DEFINITION AND PECULIARITIES OF ASSET RECOVERY Asset

More information

29. Model treaty for the prevention of crimes that infringe on the cultural heritage of peoples in the form of movable property* 1

29. Model treaty for the prevention of crimes that infringe on the cultural heritage of peoples in the form of movable property* 1 202 Compendium of United Nations standards and norms in crime prevention and criminal justice 29. Model treaty for the prevention of crimes that infringe on the cultural heritage of peoples in the form

More information

Severing the Web of Terrorist Financing

Severing the Web of Terrorist Financing Severing the Web of Terrorist Financing Severing the Web of Terrorist Financing By Lee Wolosky Al Qaeda will present a lethal threat to the United States so long as it maintains a lucrative financial network,

More information

STRATEGIC PLAN

STRATEGIC PLAN STRATEGIC PLAN 2016-2022 INDEPENDENCE INTEGRITY PROFESSIONALISM The International Council of Museums (ICOM) is the international organisation of museums and museum professionals with a worldwide reach

More information

Fourth Meeting Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room II May 2017

Fourth Meeting Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room II May 2017 4 MSP C70/17/4.MSP/8Rev Paris, March 2017 Original: English Limited distribution Meeting of States Parties to the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer

More information

The Situation in Syria

The Situation in Syria The Situation in Syria Topic Background Over 465,000 people have been killed in the civil war that is ongoing in Syria. Over one million others have been injured, and more than 12 million individuals -

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA (English only / únicamente en inglés / seulement en anglais) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-fifth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland),

More information

Living in a Globalized World

Living in a Globalized World Living in a Globalized World Ms.R.A.Zahra studjisocjali.com Page 1 Globalisation Is the sharing and mixing of different cultures, so much so that every society has a plurality of cultures and is called

More information

International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property

International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property 1 What is ICCROM? created in 1956 by a resolution of the General Conference of UNESCO intergovernmental organization

More information

The Fight Against Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Property: The 1970 UNESCO Convention and the 1995 UNIDROIT Convention

The Fight Against Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Property: The 1970 UNESCO Convention and the 1995 UNIDROIT Convention Santa Clara Journal of International Law Volume 12 Issue 2 Article 4 5-27-2014 The Fight Against Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Property: The 1970 UNESCO Convention and the 1995 UNIDROIT Convention Zsuzsanna

More information

On Protection of Cultural Monuments

On Protection of Cultural Monuments Disclaimer: The English language text below is provided by the Translation and Terminology Centre for information only; it confers no rights and imposes no obligations separate from those conferred or

More information

united nations educational, scientific and cultural organization organisation des nations unies pour l'éducation, la science et la culture 19/12/2003

united nations educational, scientific and cultural organization organisation des nations unies pour l'éducation, la science et la culture 19/12/2003 U united nations educational, scientific and cultural organization organisation des nations unies pour l'éducation, la science et la culture 7, place de Fontenoy, 75352 Paris 07 SP 1, rue Miollis, 75732

More information

INTER-AMERICAN JURIDICAL REPORT: CULTURAL HERITAGE ASSETS

INTER-AMERICAN JURIDICAL REPORT: CULTURAL HERITAGE ASSETS 90 th REGULAR SESSION OEA/Ser.Q March 6-10, 2017 CJI/doc.527/17 rev.2 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 9 March 2017 Original: Spanish INTER-AMERICAN JURIDICAL REPORT: CULTURAL HERITAGE ASSETS INTRODUCTION The OAS

More information

The present Questionnaire is prepared in application of the aforementioned decision of the Subsidiary Committee.

The present Questionnaire is prepared in application of the aforementioned decision of the Subsidiary Committee. Questionnaire for States parties to UNESCO s Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property INTRODUCTORY REMARKS At the

More information

Third Meeting Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room II May 2015

Third Meeting Paris, UNESCO Headquarters, Room II May 2015 3 MSP C70/15/3.MSP/11 Paris, March 2015 Original English Limited distribution Meeting of States Parties to the UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and

More information

What benefits can States derive from ratifying the UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage (2001)?

What benefits can States derive from ratifying the UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage (2001)? What benefits can States derive from ratifying the UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage (2001)? The UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage

More information

The present Questionnaire is prepared in application of the aforementioned decision of the Subsidiary Committee.

The present Questionnaire is prepared in application of the aforementioned decision of the Subsidiary Committee. Questionnaire for States parties to UNESCO s Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property INTRODUCTORY REMARKS At the

More information

PROVISIONAL AGREEMENT RESULTING FROM INTERINSTITUTIONAL NEGOTIATIONS

PROVISIONAL AGREEMENT RESULTING FROM INTERINSTITUTIONAL NEGOTIATIONS European Parliament 2014-2019 Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection 11.7.2017 PROVISIONAL AGREEMT RESULTING FROM INTERINSTITUTIONAL NEGOTIATIONS Subject: Proposal for a regulation of

More information

Tackling Exploitation in the Labour Market Response to the Department of Business Innovation & Skills and Home Office consultation December 2015

Tackling Exploitation in the Labour Market Response to the Department of Business Innovation & Skills and Home Office consultation December 2015 Tackling Exploitation in the Labour Market Response to the Department of Business Innovation & Skills and Home Office consultation December 2015 Introduction 1. The Law Society of England and Wales ("the

More information

Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime

Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime United Nations CTOC/COP/WG.2/2012/3- Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime Distr.: General 31 July 2012 Original: English Working Group of Government

More information

Cairo, Egypt, 31 March-2 April The 1970 Convention: Practical tools & awarenessraising

Cairo, Egypt, 31 March-2 April The 1970 Convention: Practical tools & awarenessraising Cairo, Egypt, 31 March-2 April 2014 The 1970 Convention: Practical tools & awarenessraising activities ICPRCP Intergovernmental Committee (ICPRCP) Set up in 1978 22 Members For lost certain cultural objects

More information

Increasing efficiency in the fight against fake medicines

Increasing efficiency in the fight against fake medicines Increasing efficiency in the fight against fake medicines 1 Fighting counterfeit medicines : the costs The fraudulent activity in counterfeiting medicines is continually growing worldwide and has now reached

More information

Corrupt Operations. The theft of knowledge is one of the greatest. A Look into Antiquity Theft by Professional Institutions

Corrupt Operations. The theft of knowledge is one of the greatest. A Look into Antiquity Theft by Professional Institutions Corrupt Operations A Look into Antiquity Theft by Professional Institutions Ashley Pratt English 106: Preston Fall 2008 The theft of knowledge is one of the greatest crimes against humanity. When we recognize

More information

Appendix 4 Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Legislation

Appendix 4 Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Legislation Appendix 4 Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Legislation This appendix contains summary details of a number of pieces of UK legislation that are of relevance to anti-money laundering

More information

PEACEKEEPING CHALLENGES AND THE ROLE OF THE UN POLICE

PEACEKEEPING CHALLENGES AND THE ROLE OF THE UN POLICE United Nations Chiefs of Police Summit 20-21 June 2018 UNCOPS Background Note for Session 1 PEACEKEEPING CHALLENGES AND THE ROLE OF THE UN POLICE United Nations peacekeeping today stands at a crossroads.

More information

WEDNESDAY, MAY 3 (9:15 11 AM) Panel 1: Lessons from Afghanistan Discussant: Morag Kersel, Department of Anthropology, DePaul University

WEDNESDAY, MAY 3 (9:15 11 AM) Panel 1: Lessons from Afghanistan Discussant: Morag Kersel, Department of Anthropology, DePaul University Antiquities as Global Contraband: What do we know and what can we do? Wed. & Thurs. May 3-4, 2017 Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society, University of Chicago 5701 South Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago IL

More information

FOOD STAMP PROGRAM PROBLEMS AND RECOMMENDED SOLUTIONS. 1) The Nutrition program allows the purchase of soda, candy and other harmful products

FOOD STAMP PROGRAM PROBLEMS AND RECOMMENDED SOLUTIONS. 1) The Nutrition program allows the purchase of soda, candy and other harmful products Key foods stamp reforms to promote health, deter fraud and move people towards independence through training and work State Human Services Secretaries Innovation Group Meeting Washington, DC November 19,

More information

CLT-2009/CONF.212/COM.15/7 Paris, 13 May 2007 Original: Spanish Distribution: limited

CLT-2009/CONF.212/COM.15/7 Paris, 13 May 2007 Original: Spanish Distribution: limited CLT-2009/CONF.212/COM.15/7 Paris, 13 May 2007 Original: Spanish Distribution: limited INTERGOVERNMENTAL COMMITTEE FOR PROMOTING THE RETURN OF CULTURAL PROPERTY TO ITS COUNTRIES OF ORIGIN OR ITS RESTITUTION

More information

REPORT OF THE SECRETARIAT ON ITS ACTIVITIES

REPORT OF THE SECRETARIAT ON ITS ACTIVITIES REPORT OF THE SECRETARIAT ON ITS ACTIVITIES FOR THE FOURTH SESSION OF THE SUBSIDIARY COMMITTEE OF THE MEETING OF STATE PARTIES TO THE 1970 CONVENTION ON THE MEANS OF PROHIBITNG AND PREVENTING THE ILLICIT

More information

Statement submitted by the Government of the United States of America *

Statement submitted by the Government of the United States of America * Thirteenth United Nations Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice 26 March 2015 English only Doha, 12-19 April 2015 Statement submitted by the Government of the United States of America * * Distribution

More information